Consumer Spending Fell Again in December
Fresh data offered more detail on how shoppers retrenched at the end of 2022.For more than a year now, the U.S. economy has faced two fundamental, interwoven challenges: Consumers wouldn’t stop spending, and prices wouldn’t stop rising.Both trends are now showing early signs of reversing.Consumer spending fell in both November and December, the Commerce Department said on Friday, as shoppers pulled back amid rising prices, dwindling savings and warnings of a looming recession.Inflation is also easing: Consumer prices rose 5 percent in the year through December, according to the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure. While still much more rapid than normal, that was the slowest pace in more than a year.Taken together, the figures paint a picture of an economy that is, at long last, coming off the boil. From the Fed’s perspective, that is good news: The central bank has spent the past year aggressively raising interest rates in an effort to force consumers and businesses alike to pull back their spending, which should result in slower price increases. Now there is mounting evidence those efforts are bearing fruit.“The medicine is taking,” said Sarah Watt House, senior economist at Wells Fargo. “The economy is on the right path.”That path is an uncertain and narrow one, however. So far, the Fed has managed to cool down the economy without short-circuiting the recovery and causing a big increase in unemployment. But the full effects of its actions have yet to be felt.Policymakers are expected to raise rates by another quarter point at their meeting next week, a move that would put rates in a range of 4.5 to 4.75 percent. Even once they stop raising rates, the central bank has indicated it expects to keep borrowing costs high for a significant period.Inflation F.A.Q.Card 1 of 5What is inflation? More